Completely change course, in business jargon / WED 12-31-25 / Gathering for this puzzle's attendees / Cry of loyalty in old France / One-named performer known as "Mr. Showmanship" / Stipulation for some keto dieters / Engine stat, in brief / Book reviewer, for short / Marketplace of ancient Greece / Veil worn by Muslim women
Wednesday, December 31, 2025
Constructor: Jeffrey Martinovic
Relative difficulty: Medium
Theme answers:
Trying desperately to figure out how CELL RECEPTION isn't a fatal flaw. The other "gatherings" are ... actually gatherings. Real names for real events where people get together and have a good time. Whereas CELL RECEPTION refers to the strength of your mobile phone signal. It's not an event at all. What am I missing? Is CELL RECEPTION a variety of party that I just don't know about? A party in prison, maybe? It just doesn't make any sense in this puzzle, where all the other themers are real parties. Those parties cohere so nicely as a set. And then you've got CELL RECEPTION flung down in here like ... like, I don't know what? Like it wants to be the revealer, maybe, but the puzzle doesn't need one ... and then so instead of leaving because it's not needed, CELL RECEPTION just decided to stick around. It's really the fly in the soup today. I mean, if the theme had involved making puns, changing the meaning of the second word in the phrase, you might have something. But today's wordplay involves reimagining the first words, the "boxes," not the parties. CELL RECEPTION is not an actual type of gathering and therefore has absolutely no business being in this grid.
- SQUARE DANCE (19A: Gathering for this puzzle's attendees)
- CELL RECEPTION (35A: Gathering for this puzzle's attendees)
- BOX SOCIAL (43A: Gathering for this puzzle's attendees)
- BLOCK / PARTY (61A: With 63-Across, gathering for this puzzle's attendees)
The Council of Trent (Latin: Concilium Tridentinum), held between 1545 and 1563 in Trent (or Trento), now in northern Italy, was the 19th ecumenical council of the Roman Catholic Church. Prompted by the Protestant Reformation at the time, it has been described as the "most impressive embodiment of the ideals of the Counter-Reformation." It was the last time a Catholic ecumenical council was organized outside the city of Rome, and the second time a council was convened in the territory of the Holy Roman Empire (the first being the Council of Constance).The Council issued key statements and clarifications of the Church's doctrine and teachings, including scripture, the biblical canon, sacred tradition, original sin, justification, salvation, the sacraments, the Mass, and the veneration of saints and also issued condemnations of what it defined to be heresies committed by proponents of Protestantism. The consequences of the council were also significant with regard to the Church's liturgy and censorship. (wikipedia)
• • •
I probably should've made BOX SOCIAL my Word of the Day, since that will be the least familiar type of "gathering" today, I think. I've been to block parties and I've at least seen square dances in movies, but I don't really know much about BOX SOCIALs. They feel old-fashioned. Like sock hops, but older, and with less dancing. So, not very much like sock hops at all. Merriam-Webster Dot Com tells me that a BOX SOCIAL is "a fund-raising affair at which box lunches are auctioned to the highest bidder." Wiktionary has a somewhat more detailed definition: "A fundraising event in which boxes are decorated and filled with meals for two (traditionally by women) and others (traditionally men) bid on them, anticipating a meal with the preparer." This makes it seem kinda creepy, like the women rather than the lunches are being auctioned off. Whatever the precise meaning, BOX SOCIAL seems like it has less currency in 2025 (soon to be 2026) than the other "gatherings," but it fits the theme perfectly. Really, truly, three of these themers are right on the mark. Shame about that fourth one.
The fill had highs and lows. LIBERACE MANSCAPED is a complete sentence that I would totally believe. "Did he? ... yeah, I can see that." "VIVE LE ROI!" is something I can imagine an enthusiastic French audience shouting at LIBERACE (9D: Cry of loyalty in old France + 36D: One-named performer known as "Mr. Showmanship"). Did anyone ever call LIBERACE "PAPA BEAR" (4D: Fairy tale character with a hard bed)? Seems plausible. Anyway, I like this puzzle's LIBERACEness—very festive, perfect for the occasion (which seems to be a New Year's Eve party, what with this being New Year's Eve and there being balloons and party hats all over the grid). GETS COMFY is also a nice longer answer. I don't like IDLE CHAT because the phrase is "idle chatter." It really is. Googles much better. Shows up on the first page of hits when you try to search "IDLE CHAT." I see that "IDLE CHAT" is a phrase that exists, that people sometimes say, but all it does is make me think of the real phrase, which is idle chatter. NO CARBS is an absurdity, as there is no surviving as a human without some carbs (22A: Stipulation for some keto dieters). The fill gets real ugly in the SW, which is where I finished up, unfortunately—never good to close on a low note. Ugly "a" phrase (ADAB) next to prefix (MILLI) next to absurd plural (NOGOS) two doors down from EKE. Rough stuff. The rest holds up OK.
I had a slow start because I absurdly wrote in MAC for 1A: Big name in pickup trucks (RAM) and then crossed it with MPG at 1D: Engine stat, in brief (RPM). This meant that 16A: Smaller than small (MINI) looked like it was going to be ... GIGA, a prefix that is very much not "small." I also botched the spelling of NIQAB, though that's more predictable and less embarrassing, somehow (13D: Veil worn by Muslim women). I think I conflated NIQAB and HIJAB and ended up with NIJAB? Something like that. The NIQAB extends the concept of HIJAB (head covering) to the face. Will I remember this distinction? Who knows!?
Bullets:
This one is entitled "Orion with visions of sugarplums." Probably actually "Orion sees a squirrel," but you gotta have some imagination.
OK, this photo is fooling no one, Maggie, but since you went through the trouble of trying to Christmasify your dog, and since your dog is so adorable, I'll allow it. Buffy is a classroom dog! They have classroom dogs now? I never had a classroom dog. I want a classroom dog. All classrooms should have dogs. "As Provost, I will..."
Kyoshi would prefer that you back up a step or two or twelve.
And finally, a pair of more and less successful pet photo shoots. First there's Olive, seen here in her puppy days, posing sassily for the camera (RIP sweet Olive, who died earlier this month).
And then there's Moxie, who will not willingly participate in whatever you have planned. The look of betrayal on her face. "How could you?"
Signed, Rex Parker, King of CrossWorld
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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- 30A: Marketplace of ancient Greece (AGORA) — I'm not normally that happy to see AGORA in the grid (it's crosswordese of the highest order), but today, since I imagine the AGORA as a public square, I kinda like the fact that it's here, sitting pride of place, nearly dead center. Guest of honor at all the various square dances.
- 17A: Completely change course, in business jargon (PIVOT) — a perfectly good word—why steer the clue into "business jargon"? No one wants to think about that.
- 38D: Word fittingly evoked by the phrase "Together everyone achieves more" (TEAM) — turns TEAM into an acronym
- 60D: Book reviewer, for short (CPA) — "Book" in the singular is sort of weird here, since accounting records are almost always "books," but OK, sure [Book reviewer]. Just watched a great film noir about a CPA (unlikely, but true!). Joan Crawford works her way up from poverty to a life of glamour by charming, exploiting, and discarding a series of men, the first of whom is a mousy CPA whom she convinces to become the accountant for a mob boss. Her fortunes get better from there, until, of course, inevitably they get much much worse. The movie in question costars Kent Smith as the mousy CPA, David Brian as mob boss Nick Castleman, and Steve Cochran as a west coast mobster trying to break away from east coast leadership. The movie's title?—one of the pulpiest of all time: The Damned Don't Cry (it's on HBO Max but might be leaving tomorrow, so why not watch it today? I can think of worse ways to spend New Year's Eve)
Time now for more π²πHoliday Pet Picsππ²! Note: PLEASE DO NOT SEND ME ANY MORE PET PICS, I'M ALL FULL UP FOR THIS YEAR, thank you.
Usually you hang lights on the tree, not the dogs, but Ruby and Poppy are happy to indulge your weird lighting fantasies ...
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| [Thanks, Jennifer!] |
This one is entitled "Orion with visions of sugarplums." Probably actually "Orion sees a squirrel," but you gotta have some imagination.
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| [Thanks, Judy!] |
OK, this photo is fooling no one, Maggie, but since you went through the trouble of trying to Christmasify your dog, and since your dog is so adorable, I'll allow it. Buffy is a classroom dog! They have classroom dogs now? I never had a classroom dog. I want a classroom dog. All classrooms should have dogs. "As Provost, I will..."
![]() |
| [Thanks, Maggie!] |
Kyoshi would prefer that you back up a step or two or twelve.
![]() |
| [Thanks, Thomas!] |
And finally, a pair of more and less successful pet photo shoots. First there's Olive, seen here in her puppy days, posing sassily for the camera (RIP sweet Olive, who died earlier this month).
![]() |
| [Thanks, Hannah!] |
See you next time. Have a fun, safe, happy New Year's Eve.
[Follow Rex Parker on BlueSky and Facebook and Letterboxd]
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❤️ Support this blog ❤️:
✏️ Upcoming Crossword Tournaments ✏️
- American Crossword Puzzle Tournament (Stamford, CT, Apr. 10-12, 2026) (registration opens January 8!)
π My other blog π:
- Pop Sensation (vintage paperbacks)



























